Check out that link!!!

Sent from my iPhone

On Feb 23, 2010, at 1:31 PM, Wes Wada <[email protected]> wrote:

Wow, John Ribberbos... good to see your name here, son of a gun.

Fooling big fish has never been a problem for me!  My leading cause of 
breakoffs is probably an over-enthusiastic hook set when a lunker blasts the 
fly.  In second place is putting a fly into a tree on my backcast *grin*.

Just wanted to see if there was a simple solution to what seemed to me to be an 
obvious problem with tube flies.  No reason to lose a fly unnecessarily if it 
can be avoided.  

Wes



On Tue, Feb 23, 2010 at 9:27 AM, John <[email protected]> wrote:
What's the big idea?  Are you afraid to lose any flies?  If it's that  big a 
deal don't get your flies wet.  In Michigan if your not fishing where there is 
a strong possibility of losing your fly, your not catching fish.  The flies are 
expendable.  

That being said here is a link that might solve your quandry.

  
http://tubeflyjournal.wordpress.com/2010/01/27/save-your-tube-fly-system-the-beginning/person
 or entity to which

John


Sent from my iPhone

On Feb 23, 2010, at 11:34 AM, [email protected] wrote:

Wes:

  I've been thinking about the same thing.  It makes me hesitant to use them in 
salt water or when chasing toothy critters like pike or muskie.  One 
possibility I'm considering are "bobber stops".  They are used when fishing 
slip bobbers to adjust the depth that the bait sits at. There are several types 
but one style is a small rubber egg shape one that slides onto the line.  If it 
were set an inch or so above the hook, and the hook broke off, it would in 
theory keep the tube from sliding off.  I'll do a couple of experiments and see 
what happens.  They run about a $1.99 for about 30 of them.  A cheap enough 
solution to the problem.

Jerry Caruso
"All things considered, I'd rather be in Philadelphia."

----- "Wes Wada" <[email protected]> wrote: 
> Hi VFB,


>
I've never seriously fished with tube flies, though have tied a few.  Lately I 
have run into some applications where tube fly tying would be an asset.

>
Descriptions of tube flies always tout that in trying to catch a fish, you can 
break the hook off the tippet without losing the fly.

>
I can see that, if the fly floats, but if the fly is tied onto a metal tube, I 
assume the fly just sinks and you lose it anyway?

>
Does anyone have tips on how to retain the tube portion of the fly even though 
the hook breaks off the tippet?

>

>
Thanks,

>
Wes Wada
Bend, Oregon
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